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by wizeman
4016 days ago
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I'm perfectly fine with self-governing and self-ruling, I'm just not fine with a group of people governing and imposing their rules on the others. If you or a group of people want their own currency with their own rules that's fine with me, just don't force me to use it if I don't want it (in the same way that I'm not forcing anyone to use bitcoin). I could be on the wrong side of history, but I don't care that much about it anyway, I'd rather think about the future than the past :) Maybe I'm not understanding your thought process, but are you saying that if you were born several centuries ago, you'd never even want to have democracy because it went out of style after ancient Greece and the tendency was for rulers to be Kings (i.e. you'd be on the wrong side of history if you wanted democracy instead of a monarchy)? How is being on the wrong side of history a good argument? If you want to convince me, give me a good argument about why the majority of people in my city/state/country knows what's best for me, better than me... :) (By analogy, if we were living a few centuries ago, I'd be asking you why you think a King or their blood family would know what's best for me, better than me). |
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You want everyone to self-govern, and not impose rules on anyone else? Does that go all the way down to, which side of the road do you drive on? Do you have to obey stop signs?
What I'm saying is, since we do live together in communities, the whole "let everyone vote periodically as a decision-making process" is the best we've come up with, and Bitcoin is a step away from that--a currency that does have economic decisions built into it, but changing those is never subject to a vote by the citizenry.
You know what's interesting? Whenever I bring up this whole "Bitcoin is undemocratic" idea, no bitcoin defender ever says, yeah, we should work to include more people in how it's run. Not one.
You'd think, if it were money for the people (i.e. not controlled by a government), that they'd want it to be responsive to the people, too.
Also, by "on the wrong side of history," I mean to say that you're pushing for ideas that have already been discarded as not as good as their successors--when future generations look back on those who oppose things like "society" (which I gather from your declaration that you don't want anyone governing or imposing rules on anyone else), they'll say, "yes, that was wrong, too."